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    copied!<p>An open TCP socket does not require any communication whatsoever between the two parties (let's call them Alice and Bob) unless actual data is being sent. If Alice has received acknowledgments for all the data she's sent to Bob, there's no way she can distinguish among the following cases:</p> <ol> <li>Bob has been unplugged, or is otherwise inaccessible to Alice. <li>Bob has been rebooted, or otherwise forgotten about the open TCP socket he'd established with Alice. <li>Bob is connected to Alice, and knows he has an open connection, but doesn't have anything he wants to say. </ol> <p>If Alice hasn't heard from Bob in awhile and wants to distinguish among the above conditions, she can resend her last byte of data, wrapped in a suitable TCP frame to be recognizable as a retransmission, essentially pretending she hasn't heard the acknowledgment. If Bob is unplugged, she'll hear nothing back, even if she repeatedly sends the packet over a period of many seconds. If Bob has rebooted or forgotten the connection, he will immediately respond saying the connection is invalid. If Bob is happy with the connection and simply has nothing to say, he'll respond with an acknowledgment of the retransmission.</p> <p>The Timeout indicates how long Alice is willing to wait for a response when she sends a packet which demands a reply. The Keepalive time indicates how much time she should allow to lapse before she retransmits her last bit of data and demands an acknowledgment. If Bob goes missing, the sum of the Keepalive and Timeout values will indicate the worst-case time between Alice receiving her last bit of data and her deciding that Bob is dead.</p>
 

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